Especially one with the older man and younger blondie co-hosts. Really wrong.

Mostly, I figured “The Morning Show With Mike And Juliet,” which premiered a couple of months ago, would be a “what a nerve” show – putting them against the reigning older man/younger blondie show, “Live with Regis & Kelly,” which is always pretty darned good. I mean, really.

I finally sat down yesterday to watch the 64,000 hours of “Mike And Juliet” that I’ve been recording since the show started and, as it turns out, even I – a beloved figure in my profession – can be wrong.

I mean, who knew WASPs could be so funny?

And these two can be very funny.

Maybe they figure they have nothing to lose.

Mike Jerrick and Juliet Huddy, who made their bones on the cable shows “Fox & Friends” and “Dayside,” have taken an old standard (as Paula Abdul would say) and made it their own.

For the new gig, Mike got a new hairdo, which is a huge mistake – turning him from almost-hipster to a dead ringer for William H. Macy.

Juliet, on the other hand, looks like the love child of Tatum O’Neal and Bruce Jenner.

The format is pretty standard; the set is kind of dull; and the celebrity guests strictly “B” level, although it seems to be rising.

But it’s the other guests that work so well.

Instead of the usual annoying, expert talking heads who appear on all these shows, they are reaching for different types who, more times than not, are genuinely interesting.

For a cooking segment, they had the head chef from The Bellagio in Vegas. Yawn, right? Yawn, wrong. This guy had served 10 years in the federal pen for dealing crack and learned to cook there.

In a fashion segment a few days ago, The Post’s Danica Lo worked with twin models in the same outfits demonstrating how – with some adjustments – to avoid looking like a fatty. Clever.

And there’s always a morning-after “American Idol” segment. Given the fact that they are on the same network as “Idol,” it was refreshing to see Mike and Juliet also think this year’s finalists are a pretty forgettable lot – with a few obvious exceptions.

Surprisingly, the only stinkolas are the celebrity segments.

There was one recently with Cheryl Hines hocking a prescription sleeping pill for “Sleep Awareness Week” or some such ridiculousness. Forget the pill, just watch the segment; it’s enough to put you in a coma for years.

Mike and Juliet, on the other hand, are a wakeup call for for late risers – and rival networks, I might add.